PH1513 Knowledge and Mind - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

PH1513 Knowledge and Mind

Description:

John reads in the newspaper that Mel Gibson is running for president. John believes that Mel Gibson is running for president. The newspaper has it wrong, however. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: irs93
Category:
Tags: gibson | knowledge | mel | mind | ph1513

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PH1513 Knowledge and Mind


1
PH1513 Knowledge and Mind
2
PH1513 EpistemologyWeeks 5-12
  • 1. Practical matters.
  • 2. The link between epistemology and philosophy
    of mind.
  • 3. Introduction to epistemology.

3
Practical issues.
  • 1. No classes in week 6.
  • 2. Essay can be either on philosophy of mind or
    on epistemology.
  • 3. Exam questions will be a mix of epistemology
    and philosophy of mind questions.
  • 4. Contact details Martijn Blaauw
  • Office Old Brewery Ground Floor room
    16.
  • Telephone 272798
  • E-mail m.blaauw_at_abdn.ac.uk
  • 5. Office hours Wed, 11-12, Thurs, 12-1.
  • 6. Recording lectures is OK.
  • If you have any questions, dont hesitate to
    contact me!

4
Epistemology and Philosophy of Mind
  • The connection between these two branches of
    philosophy is the notion of belief.
  • To believe something is a mental state as
    such, it is the object of study of philosophy of
    mind.
  • To believe something is usually thought to be
    the core ingredient of knowledge.

5
What is epistemology?
  • Epistemologists are primarily interested in the
    concept knowledge, but also in related concepts
    like belief, truth, justification for
    belief, and rationality.
  • The key question in epistemology is the
    questionWhat is knowledge?
  • This question asks what the correct analysis of
    the concept knowledge is.
  • This raises two questions

6
Two questions
  • I. What type of knowledge do epistemologists
    focus on?
  • II. What is conceptual analysis?
  • In what follows, I will answer these two
    questions.

7
I. What type of knowledge?
  • Four types of knowledge
  • (i) Knowledge-how (ability knowledge)
  • (ii) Knowledge-wh (interrogative knowledge)
  • (iii) Knowledge-Q (direct object knowledge)
  • (iv) Knowledge-that (propositional knowledge)
  • ? We will focus on (iv) knowledge-that.

8
II. What is conceptual analysis?
  • Analysing a concept means providing the
    individually necessary and jointly sufficient
    conditions that must be satisfied in order for
    the concept to be applicable.
  • So we try to decompose the concept into its
    consituent parts.
  • If any one of the parts is missing, the concept
    cannot be applied.

9
Combining I and II The Key Epistemological
Question
  • What is knowledge?
  • Where this question should be understood as a
    request to provide a conceptual analysis of
    propositional knowledge (knowledge-that).

10
Examples
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president? Does he know that Hilary Clinton is
    running for president?
  • Answer Yes.

11
Examples Knowledge implies Belief.
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president. John is a very stubborn man, however,
    and does not believe a word of what the newspaper
    (The Sun) says. What the newspaper says is true
    however Hilary Clinton is running for president.
    Does John know that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president?
  • Answer No.
  • Why not He does not believe it.

12
Examples Knowledge implies Truth.
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Mel Gibson is running for
    president. John believes that Mel Gibson is
    running for president. The newspaper has it
    wrong, however. Does John know that Mel Gibson is
    running for president?
  • Answer No.
  • Reason False.

13
Examples Knowledge implies Justification.
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president. This is true, and John believes it to
    be true. However, the reporter wanted to play a
    trick on the readers of the newspaper and wanted
    to deceive them by writing that Hilary Clinton is
    running for president the reporter thought this
    was false. Unbeknownst to the reporter, however,
    it is true. Does John know that Hilary Clinton is
    running for president?
  • Answer NO
  • Reason No justification.

14
The standard analysis of knowledge
  • Knowledge
  • Justified
  • True
  • Belief.
  • If any one of these is missing, there can be no
    knowledge.

15
Sources of knowledge
  • Perception
  • Reasoning
  • Testimony
  • Memory

16
Summary
  • What you need to take away from this lecture
  • (1) What is conceptual analysis?
  • (2) What different types of knowledge can be
    distinguished?
  • (3) What is the standard analysis of knowledge?
  • (4) What are some standard sources of knowledge?

17
Next week
  • Problems for the traditional analysis of
    knowledge in terms of justified true belief.

18
PH1513 Knowledge and Mind
  • Lecture 2
  • March 1st 2007

19
Structure of the lecture
  • 1. Practical issues
  • 2. Recap of the last lecture
  • 3. Knowledge can not be due to luck
  • 4. The value of knowledge

20
Practical issues
  • 1. No classes in week 6.
  • 2. Essay can be either on philosophy of mind or
    on epistemology.
  • 3. Exam questions will be a mix of epistemology
    and philosophy of mind questions.
  • 4. Contact details Martijn Blaauw
  • Office Old Brewery Ground Floor room
    16.
  • Telephone 272798
  • E-mail m.blaauw_at_abdn.ac.uk
  • 5. Office hours Wed, 11-12, Thurs, 12-1.
  • 6. Recording lectures is OK.
  • If you have any questions, dont hesitate to
    contact me!

21
Recap of previous lecture
  • 1) What is conceptual analysis?
  • (2) What different types of knowledge can be
    distinguished?
  • (3) What is the standard analysis of knowledge?
  • (4) What are some standard sources of knowledge?

22
Sources of knowledge
  • Perception
  • Reasoning
  • Testimony
  • Memory
  • Special sources sensus divinitatis.

23
Knowledge belief and truth
  • Knowledge implies at least belief and truth
  • (a) Knowledge implies belief
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president. John is a very stubborn man, however,
    and does not believe a word of what the newspaper
    (The Sun) says. What the newspaper says is true
    however Hilary Clinton is running for president.
    Does John know that Hilary Clinton is running for
    president?

24
  • (b) Knowledge implies truth
  • John and Jill are in the kitchen. John reads in
    the newspaper that Mel Gibson is running for
    president. John believes that Mel Gibson is
    running for president. The newspaper has it
    wrong, however. Does John know that Mel Gibson is
    running for president?

25
Knowledge and luck
  • Consider the following case
  • Harry forms the belief that the horse Lucky
    Lass will win the next race purely on the basis
    of the fact that the name of the horse appeals to
    him. As it happens, Lucky Lass actually wins the
    race. Did Harry know this?

26
Knowledge and luck
  • Intuitively no.
  • Reason the fact that Harrys belief is true is a
    matter of sheer luck.
  • Compare hitting the bulls-eye by sheer luck
    does not mean you are a skilled archer.

27
Knowledge, luck, and archery
  • Knowledge is just like archery in that it is an
    achievement
  • Beliefs aim at truth, just like the archer aims
    at the bulls-eye. Hitting the truth (the
    bulls-eye) by luck isnt going to make you a
    skilled archer, nor give you knowledge.

28
Luck and the standard analysis
  • One way to characterize the anti-luck condition
    on knowledge would be in terms of justification
    (the third component in the standard analysis of
    knowledge).

29
The value of knowledge
  • Why is knowledge valuable?
  • First way to answer this question
  • Knowledge implies true belief, and true belief is
    instrumentally valuable.
  • (It is better to have true beliefs than false
    beliefs, and true belief can serve certain
    purposes).

30
The value of knowledge
  • Problems with the first answer
  • (1) Some true beliefs are trivial.
  • (2) Explaining the value of knowledge in terms of
    the value of true belief implies that knowledge
    is no more valuable than true belief. But we do
    seem to value knowledge more than mere true
    belief.

31
The value of knowledge
  • Knowledge is more valuable than true belief
    because knowledge is stable.
  • A true belief that also is knowledge is far
    likely to remain fast in response to changing
    circumstances than mere true belief.
  • If you know, you could not easily have been
    wrong. If you have mere true belief, you could
    easily have been wrong.

32
The value of knowledge
  • Knowledge has intrinsic value it is good of
    itself, regardless of whether the knowledge in
    question serves some sort of purpose. (Knowledge
    is like friendship in this regard we value
    friends not because they are useful to us but
    because they are valuable to us of themselves).
  • True belief never is intrinsically valuable but
    only valuable in the instrumental sense.

33
Recap
  • Knowledge excludes luck
  • True belief is instrumentally valuable
  • Knowledge is stable
  • Knowledge can be intrinsically valuable

34
Next lecture
  • Defining knowledge
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com